This
past summer the French food and drug office, the Agence Nationale de
Sécurité du Médicament, greenlit limited medical cannabis trials inside
France, something that’s been illegal since 1953.
Many have applauded
the move as an important first step toward rational, public
health-oriented cannabis regulation in France. The Agence Nationale de
Sécurité du Médicament similarly praised
the trial for its groundbreaking efforts to produce “the first French
data on the efficiency and safety” of cannabis for medical therapies.
This
is all well and good. However, when it comes to cannabis, a peculiar
historical amnesia seems to be gripping French medicine. These trials
are not the nation’s first efforts to produce scientific data on
medicinal cannabis products. Far from it.
‘A drug not to be neglected’
During my research
into the history of intoxicants in modern France, I found that in the
middle of the 19th century Paris functioned as the epicenter of an
international movement to medicalize hashish, an intoxicant made from
the pressed resin of cannabis plants.
Many
pharmacists and physicians then working in France believed hashish was a
dangerous and exotic intoxicant from the “Orient”—the Arabo-Muslim
world—that could be tamed by pharmaceutical science and rendered safe and useful against the era’s most frightening diseases.
Starting
in the late 1830s they prepared and sold hashish-infused edibles,
lozenges, and later tinctures—hashish-infused alchohol—and even
“medicinal cigarettes” for asthma in pharmacies across the country.
Throughout
the 1840s and 1850s dozens of French pharmacists staked their careers
on hashish, publishing dissertations, monographs, and peer-review
articles on its medicinal and scientific benefits.
French epidemiologist Louis-Rémy Aubert-Roche published a treatise in 1840
in which he argued hashish, administered as a small edible called
“dawamesk” taken with coffee, successfully cured plague in seven of 11
patients he treated in the hospitals of Alexandria and Cairo during the
epidemic of 1834-35. An anti-contagionist in a pre-germ theory era,
Aubert-Roche, as most physicians then, believed the plague an
untransmittable disease of the central nervous system spread to humans
via “miasma,” or bad air, in unhygienic and poorly ventilated areas.
Aubert-Roche
thus believed, mistaking symptom relief and luck for a cure, that
hashish intoxication excited the central nervous system and counteracted
the effects of the plague. “The plague,” he wrote, “is a disease of the
nerves. Hashish, a substance that acts upon the nervous system, has
given me the best results. I thus believe it is a drug not to be
neglected.”
Reefer madness
Physician Jacques-Joseph Moreau de Tours, organizer of the infamous Club des Hachichins in Paris during the 1840s, likewise heralded dawamesk
as a homeopathic wonder drug for treating mental illness. Moreau
believed insanity was caused by lesions on the brain. And also believed
that hashish counteracted the effects.
Moreau
reported in his 1845 work, “Du Hachisch et l’aliénation mentale,” that
between 1840 and 1843 he cured seven patients suffering mental illness
at Hôpital Bicêtre in central Paris with hashish.
Moreau wasn’t totally
off-base; today cannabis-based medicines are prescribed for depression, anxiety, PTSD, and bipolar disorders.
Despite the small sample size, doctors from the US, the UK, Germany, and Italy published favorable reviews of Moreau’s work with hashish during the late 1840s and across the 1850s. One praised it as a “discovery of much importance for the civilized world.”
Tincture wars
Though
physicians in France and abroad touted dawamesk as a miracle cure, they
also complained about the inability to standardize doses due to the
variation in the potency of different cannabis plants. They also wrote
about the challenges posed by the common adulteration of dawamesk, which
was exported from North Africa and often laced with other psychoactive
plant extracts.
In the early 1830s several physicians and pharmacists in the British Empire
attempted to solve these problems by dissolving hashish in alcohol to
produce a tincture. By the middle of the decade, French practitioners
followed suit. They developed and marketed their own hashish tinctures
for French patients. One pharmacist in Paris, Edmond de Courtive,
branded his concoction “Hachischine” after the infamous Muslim assassins often associated with hashish in French culture.
The
popularity of hashish tincture grew rapidly in France during the late
1840s, peaking in 1848.
That was when pharmacist Joseph-Bernard Gastinel
and the aforementioned De Courtive engaged in a legal battle over the
patent—then known as the “right to priority”—for tincture manufactured
though a particular distillation method. “L’Affaire Gastinel,” as the
press termed it, caused an uproar in French medical circles and occupied the pages of journals and newspapers in Paris for much of that fall.
To
defend his patent, Gastinel sent two colleagues to argue his case to
the Academy of Medicine in October 1848. One, a physician called Willemin, claimed
that not only did Gastinel devise the tincture distillation method in
question but that his tincture provided a cure for cholera, also thought
to be a disease of the nerves.
Though Willemin
was unable to convince the Academy of Gastinel’s right to priority, he
did convince doctors in Paris to adopt hashish tincture as a treatment
against cholera.
Physicians in Paris didn’t have to
wait long to test Willemin’s theory. A cholera epidemic erupted in the
city’s outskirts just months later. But when hashish tincture failed to
cure the nearly 7,000 Parisians killed by the “blue death,” doctors increasingly lost faith in the wonder drug.
In
the following decades, hashish tincture fell into disrepute as the
medical theories of anti-contagionism that underpinned the drug’s use
gave way to germ theory and thus a new understanding of epidemic
diseases and their treatment. During the same period, physicians in
French Algeria increasingly pointed to hashish use as a key cause of
insanity and criminality among indigenous Muslims, a diagnosis they
termed “folie haschischique,” or hashish-induced psychosis. Heralded as a
wonder drug only decades before, by the end of 19th century the drug
was rebranded as an “Oriental poison.”
Lessons for today
These
earlier efforts to medicalize hashish in 19th-century France offer
doctors, public health officials, and policymakers today several
important insights as they work to return cannabis-based medications to
the French market.
First, they must work to
dissociate cannabis intoxicants and medicines from colonial notions of
“Oriental” otherness and Muslim violence that ironically underpinned
both the rise and fall of hashish as medicine in France during the 19th
century. As scholar Dorothy Roberts astutely argued in her 2015 TED talk, “race medicine is bad medicine, poor science, and a false interpretation of humanity.”
Doctors
and patients also must be measured in their expectations of the
benefits of medicalized cannabis and not overpromise and then deliver
lackluster results, as happened with hachichine during the cholera
outbreak of 1848-49.
And they must remain mindful
that medical knowledge unfolds historically and that staking the new
career of cannabis as medicine on contested theories could hitch the
drug’s success to the wrong horse, as happened with hashish after the
obsolescence of anti-contagionism in the 1860s.
But
if France were to engage its colonial past, reform its prohibitionist
policies, and continue to open up legal room for medical cannabis
trials, perhaps it could again become a global leader in this new
medical marijuana movement.
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